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Higher Plasma Creatinine Is Associated with an Increased Risk of Death in Patients with Non-Metastatic Rectal but Not Colon Cancer: Results from an International Cohort Consortium

Authors :
Ulrich, Jennifer Ose
Biljana Gigic
Stefanie Brezina
Tengda Lin
Anita R. Peoples
Pauline P. Schobert
Andreas Baierl
Eline van Roekel
Nivonirina Robinot
Audrey Gicquiau
David Achaintre
Augustin Scalbert
Fränzel J. B. van Duijnhoven
Andreana N. Holowatyj
Tanja Gumpenberger
Petra Schrotz-King
Alexis B. Ulrich
Arve Ulvik
Per-Magne Ueland
Matty P. Weijenberg
Nina Habermann
Pekka Keski-Rahkonen
Andrea Gsur
Dieuwertje E. Kok
Cornelia M.
Source :
Cancers; Volume 15; Issue 13; Pages: 3391
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2023.

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is increasingly recognized as a heterogeneous disease. No studies have prospectively examined associations of blood metabolite concentrations with all-cause mortality in patients with colon and rectal cancer separately. Targeted metabolomics (Biocrates AbsoluteIDQ p180) and pathway analyses (MetaboAnalyst 4.0) were performed on pre-surgery collected plasma from 674 patients with non-metastasized (stage I–III) colon (n = 394) or rectal cancer (n = 283). Metabolomics data and covariate information were received from the international cohort consortium MetaboCCC. Cox proportional hazards models were computed to investigate associations of 148 metabolite levels with all-cause mortality adjusted for age, sex, tumor stage, tumor site (whenever applicable), and cohort; the false discovery rate (FDR) was used to account for multiple testing. A total of 93 patients (14%) were deceased after an average follow-up time of 4.4 years (60 patients with colon cancer and 33 patients with rectal cancer). After FDR adjustment, higher plasma creatinine was associated with a 39% increase in all-cause mortality in patients with rectal cancer. HR: 1.39, 95% CI 1.23–1.72, pFDR = 0.03; but not colon cancer: pFDR = 0.96. Creatinine is a breakdown product of creatine phosphate in muscle and may reflect changes in skeletal muscle mass. The starch and sucrose metabolisms were associated with increased all-cause mortality in colon cancer but not in rectal cancer. Genes in the starch and sucrose metabolism pathways were previously linked to worse clinical outcomes in CRC. In summary, our findings support the hypothesis that colon and rectal cancer have different etiological and clinical outcomes that need to be considered for targeted treatments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers; Volume 15; Issue 13; Pages: 3391
Accession number :
edsair.multidiscipl..d079b52972eab25afb17ce2a295ffd86
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15133391